A rigorous academic figure-drawing training under the American magic realist John Wilde provided
the on-going basis for a sporadic production of drawings. In the 80s an interest in two things
prompted a series of drawing experiments: one was the early post-modern prohibition against
representation of the figure, on the grounds of its reinforcement of cultural sexual stereotypes
and hierarchies; and the second was the ability to 'invent' non-existent but convincing bodies,
without reference to a model. Attempts were made at non-hierarchic equivalencies of gender
representation in certain drawings, along with other drawings producing fictional presences
- an ancient trope of drawn representation, given new critical traction during the period
of emergence of endless digital-manipulation of photography.